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By Clive Hare / Coating System Design Inc., Lakeville, MA and Roland Beck / Manager, Marketing, NYCO Minerals Inc., Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Coatings formulators today cannot fail to acknowledge the contribution of polymer chemistry, which has provided a large and diverse selection of binders with which we can create our magic. The intricate manipulation of these binders now clearly and substantially underlies our discipline and, without an understanding of the chemistry behind this, modern formulation would be impossible. Budding coatings formulators must be well schooled in such manipulation if they are to find a place within our industry; toward this end, numerous courses of instruction are available from universities, consultants and the industry-related societies. Coatings technology is, however, more than polymer chemistry. The polymeric binder is little more than the mortar from which we build the structure of our industry. Of equal importance are the pigments: the bricks that are bound together by that mortar.
ments. It is, however, sadly apparent that those formulators who have followed these greats have been sorely remiss in not providing would-be apprentices to our trade with updated expansions of this portion of our technology. It is not that such treatment is not pertinent to this modern industry far from it. In todays technology, where toxicology and compliance are major concerns, there is much to be salvaged from the judicious manipulation of the extender package. In this article, we can do no more than broach the subject. We will, however, attempt an approach more in keeping with todays predominantly engineering-based schemes in treating extender technology. The more common types of extenders in use today by the coatings industry are listed in Table 1.
ments having different sizes and shapes set in a more or less continuous polymeric matrix. The special relationship of pigment volume to the total volume of paint is a most crucial parameter on which many characteristics of the applied film depend. It may reasonably be argued that classification of a paint film in terms of its PVC/CPVC ratio is as sensible and pertinent to its usage as is any classification in terms of binder type. Asbeck and van Loo introduced the concept of critical pigment volume (CPV) to the coatings industry in the late 1940s.3 The relationship of actual PVC to this theoretical value was shown to play a paramount role in the behavior of paint films. Even before this, certainly since the introduction of titanium dioxide (TiO2) as the primary white pigment, it was realized that the extensive use of such prime pigments at levels beyond those levels required to achieve adequate hiding, color or UV absorption was a blatant waste of money. Extender pigments, rather than prime pigments, were thus
Specific Weight Particle Oil Gravity per Gallon Size Absorption (lbs) (microns) 2.7 22.6 1.5 - 13 6 - 30
pH
Particle Shape
Utility
Whiting
Calcium Carbonate
8 - 8.5
1.65
Nodular
Fill, corrosion control Fill, stress mitigation, film reinforcement Fill, barrier properties
Talc
Magnesium Silicate
2.8
23.3
2 - 15
30 - 45
8-9
1.58
Various
Chlorite
2.8
23.3
2 - 10
35 - 45
8-9
1.57
Platy
Silica (Amorphous)
2.6
22.1
5 - 40
20 - 50
6-7
1.54
Nodular
Fill, inertness, flatting, abrasion resistance Fill, rheology, flatting agents Fill, flatting agents Fill, opacity Fill, inertness, exterior durability Fill, barrier properties, stress mitigation, corrosion resistance Fill, film reinforcement, corrosion resistance, stress mitigation Fill, inertness
Silica (Fumed)
Silica
2.2
18.4
6-7
1.54
Nodular
100 - 300 25 - 50 21 - 29
6 - 8.5 4.5 - 7 10
5 2.5 5.5
Mica
2.8
23.5
5 - 20
50 - 70
7.5 - 9.5
1.59
2-3
Platy
Wollastonite
Calcium Silicate
2.9
24.2
5 - 44
25
10
1.63
Acicular
Barytes
Barium Sulfate
4.5
37 .5
2.0 - 30.0
10
1.64
Nodular
Extenders
up were (and are) often used to maximize such packing. Aesthetic Properties Wet Paint and Processing Properties Making matters more complex, Gloss control Viscosity extenders come in all shapes and sizes, Sheen Flow and Leveling Opacity Ease of Dispersion which can confuse any attempt to theoBrightness Sedimentation and Settling retically calculate any optimum Dirt Pick-up and Cleanability PVC/CPVC ratio from the absorption Texture and Smoothness characteristics and specific gravities of the individual pigments making up the Mechanical and Physical Properties Performance and Resistance Properties Hardness Abrasion, Burnishing and Scrub Resistance mix. So complex and variable are the Impact Resistance Permeability geometrics in which pigment of mixed Resistance to Applied Stress Corrosion Resistance size and shape can lie within the polyFilm Reinforcement Chemical Resistance meric matrix that mathematical reducPorosity Thermal Properties (Insulation and Conductivity) tion of this spatial arrangement within Cracking and Checking Resistance Electrical Properties (Insulation and Conductivity) the film defies even the most sophistiOther cated computers. This forces the forCost Control mulator to rely on more empirically determined changes in performance, in order to achieve optimum film characteristics. preferred for adjusting the PVC/CPVC ratio to that value On the other hand, differences in shape and size of consistent with the optimization of film properties. different extenders can lead to many practical benefits. In using extenders in this manner, the oil (or binder) At first, the selection of extender systems to fill the sysabsorption value and specific gravity were realized to be tem or to achieve this necessary relationship was for crucial to this relationship. The more oil (or binder) that the most part determined empirically almost casualit takes to wet out a given weight of pigment, the higher ly, in fact. The make up of the extender package was the oil absorption value and the lower the CPVC. If largely predicated on cost reduction. Since then, if only PVC/CPVC ratio is crucial to usage, as it most certainly slowly, we have come to understand that care in apporis, then the CPVC value will dictate the PVC at which the tioning the available extender volume between the varpaint is formulated. As oil (or binder) absorption is relatious extenders available to the formulator can result in ed to surface area and surface area to particle size, the films with enhanced mechanical and even performance importance of particle size and particle size distribution is characteristics. Different coating types having different a corollary of the realization of the importance of oil usage and performance requirements benefit from difabsorption. Extenders vary in particle size from 0.01-44 ferent types of extenders. microns. Super-fine silica particles are extremely small Absorptivity is also, of course, related to the porosity and have a very large surface area (per unit weight of of the pigment particle. Pigment binder may be absorbed product), with very high absorbency. This results in a drainto the pigment surface as well as adsorbed onto the matically minimized CPVC, so that in sufficient loadings, surface. This is the reason why highly absorbent materithe surface of the applied film that bears such extenders als such as diatomaceous silica have high oil absorption may be disrupted as the particles of pigment protrude values. As noted in Table 1, these materials, which are through the surface of the film and scatter incident light, derived from the skeletal remains of primordial diatoms, so reducing gloss. In this way, fine silicas and/or other are also widely used as flatting agents. Extenders, howhighly absorbent extenders (diatomaceous silicas, for ever, are used by todays chemist for far more reasons example) act to flatten the paint. than just for fill and flatting (see Table 2). While extender pigments have a wide range of particle sizes, the smaller particles may actually fit into the interstices between the larger particles of extender, Particle Shape Nodular Extenders thus taking up volume originally filled by the binder As a pigment system is adjusted so that more binder is with pigment volume, and elevating CPVC. In this case, absorbed (and the CPVC decreased), the solid, relativethe additional pigment does not compromise the ly binder-depleted system inevitably increases in vismechanical properties of the film. Where extender pigcosity. To compensate for this, the formulator must add ments did not provide the necessary range in particle solvent, which reduces both volume solids and increassize required to achieve a high degree of pigment packes VOC neither a desirable consequence in these ing, two extenders of similar (or different) chemical make days of cost control and increasingly restrictive regulaExtenders may be used in coatings to provide or enhance the following properties:
tions. There are, therefore, very real advantages in seeking extender packages that are made up of extenders having lower oil absorption. This has become a primary requirement in the selection of extender systems. Some of the most effective fillers in terms of low oil absorption are the nodular extenders such as whiting, barytes and amorphous silica (as opposed to the fumed and diatomaceous types). These materials provide little value in aesthetics, however, as do the china clays, which are used effectively in combination with TiO2 to enhance opacity. This is achieved by optimization of the manner in which the film scatters light, and is discussed below. That being said, nodular pigments contribute little to the mechanical properties of the film.
Oxidizing systems, which tend to crosslink on aging will crack and check in service unless properly reinforced. Asphalt roof coatings, which have poor resistance to oxidizing conditions, are rapidly affected by exposure to UV and will alligator badly as the surface embrittles. These types of effects may be controlled by reinforcing the system with fibrous, acicular or platy extenders. Rods have lower surface area than plates or fibers, and therefore it is not surprising that reinforcement with the acicular wollastonite has less downside effect on reduced viscosity and allows lower VOCs than does the use of platy pigments, which is a definite plus in todays tough regulatory environment.
Extenders
ratio, microfiber extenders (wollastonite) have been used as reinforcing agents instead of asbestos in more modern asbestos free asphalt roof coatings. Mica, which has sealing properties as well as reinforcing properties, has also been widely used in joint compounds for wallboards.
While the physical aspects of extenders are of particular importance to their use in coatings, so is their chemical make up.
Strain Mitigation in the Case of the Surface-Treated Wollastonite
Strain mitigation may be enhanced by the engineered wollastonite pigments treated with reactive silanes. Here strain dissipation is achieved in another way.5 In the presence of moisture, this is accomplished by the reversible hydrolysis of the siloxane bond at the pigment surface, followed by slippage of the resultant silanol along the surface and the reformation of a second siloxane linkage at an area of lower strain. Pigment/binder adhesive strength is thus re-established without any permanently negative side effects. As the treated wollastonites are also less absorbent than the untreated materials, these advantages are achieved without decreasing CPVC and without increasing viscosity or VOC an unfortunate corollary of strain dissipation that occurs by way of the use of flat, platy pigments. Wollastonite has a natural surface chemistry that is particularly amenable to such silane treatments, and these engineered products have achieved widespread use by the coatings industry.
actually broadcast onto the wet film before it has dried, the excess unbound material being swept from the floor after the ground coat has dried. However, the toxicological hazards of free silica have, in recent years, begun to limit the use of this type of material in coatings. Only slightly less hard than silica are nepheline syenite and wollastonite. These materials might be considered suitable replacements for silica, and wollastonite has recently been growing in importance in traffic paint. At the other end of the hardness (Mohs) scale are the very soft extenders such as the talc and china clay (calcined clays are somewhat harder than the normal water washed hydrated aluminum silicate). These materials are preferred for their good sanding properties. Both talcs and china clays are platy and this enhances their applicability in sanding sealers with good barrier properties.
Chemical Effects
While the physical aspects of extenders are of particular importance to their use in coatings, so is their chemical make up. Extenders were at one time classified as inert pigments. Today we know that this is not entirely true. Some products such as calcium carbonate or whiting are readily reactive with acids. As such, they must be avoided in the pigmentation of alkali-sensitive systems (carboxylated vinyls, waterborne alkyds, etc.) with which they may react, or systems intended for acidic environments (which may intensify the deterioration of these pigment-sensitized coatings). Acid-catalyzed systems will require some adjustment in catalyst level if such alkaline pigments are used. Care should also be taken to avoid combining alkaline extenders with alkaline-sensitive color pigments such as iron blue. Films containing alkaline pigments are also susceptible to staining by soluble iron and copper compounds. Dissolution of the extenders and the subsequent leaching of their salts from the film by acidic environments (including acid rain) will tend to weaken the film. This may also lead to other defects, such as frosting, where the sulfate salts of calcium (from acidic dew) tend to collect as a white crystalline deposit on dark colored films in locations where soluble salt removal with rain is not possible. However, whiting may be of value as a pigment for anti-corrosive paints, where its natural basicity will tend to reduce the levels of oxygen required to establish passivity on the sub-film metal. Larger particle sized pigments, which are favored for metal primers, give coarser films with better flow and tooth for improved intercoat adhesion. Fine, wet ground and precipitated carbonates are used in gloss finishes and enamels, while intermediate sized pigments are favored for semi-gloss pigments and flats. Whiting of intermediate fineness is also used in exterior house paints, where the pigments improve mildew
Hardness
Another important property is the hardness of the mineral. The hardest extenders are predominantly silicas, especially quartz type crystalline silicas. These materials are used to improve the hardness and wear resistance of coatings, giving optimum scrub and burnishing resistance in interior latex paints and abrasion resistance in floor finishes and maintenance coatings. Coarse grades, which may protrude above the surface of the film, will give excellent tooth to primers enhancing recoatability. Amorphous silicas, which are generally micronized versions of the same crystalline materials used in floor finishes, are also used in this way. Where slippage is likely, extra coarse crystalline silicas may be
resistance, reduce chalking as well as assist in controlling cost. Larger sized grades of whiting are said to give good color retention in exterior house paints. Whiting is a nodular pigment, however, and little reinforcement of the film may be achieved with any grade of this pigment.
ntirely more useful as a corrosion resistant auxiliary pigment is, again, wollastonite.5 Although quite basic, the pigment is neither as soluble nor as acid sensitive as the carbonate. Wollastonite has been successfully used as an extender in epoxy systems for acid service, but is soluble enough to provide the required degree of pH control in metal primers for improved passivity. In this regard, wollastonite has been used successfully as an auxiliary pigment in inhibitive systems (where it has been used to reduce the levels of the more expensive inhibitive pigments) necessary to achieve passivation. Also, in combination with flat, platy (highly impermeable) prime pigments such as aluminum flake, wollastonite finds use in barrier systems. In both barrier primers and inhibitive primers, the wollastonite markedly elevates the corrosion resistance of the system with some considerable cost savings because of the reduction in the costly primes that the use of the wollastonite allows. It is now widely used in these applications. Still further improvement in acid resistance without any deterioration in value as an anti-corrosive auxiliary pigment, is achieved by surface treating the wollastonite with the same organo-terminated silanes noted above. Engineered pigments of this type are being widely used in both anti-corrosive primers and in chemically resistant finishes. Some care is, however, necessary in the selection of the pigment grade as mutual reactions of the treated pigment and the binder is predicated on the nature of the silane used. Mica has also been used as an extender for aluminized barrier systems. As much as 25% by weight of aluminum flake has been replaced with mica without deleterious effects on corrosion resistance. As mica is more chemical resistant than aluminum, this device is particularly valuable where the film is exposed to conditions of extreme pH. In barrier systems, the degree of hydrophilicity must be controlled as water loving pigments such as china clays will tend to attract water into the film. Thus mica and platy talcs and chlorites are much more desirable than are the clays in barrier systems. On the other hand, clays may be used more effectively in inhibitive systems. China clays that are platy like the talc, will also tend to reinforce the film, and are said to improve the sanding of industrial primers. Some materials that have been used in coatings in the past have relatively high water solubles. Anhydrous
calcium sulfate falls into this category. It is now little used, but was sold and employed for many years as a complex with TiO2. In addition, chemical reactivity and corrosion resistance is often influenced by the soluble salt content of the extender. Materials having high solubles tend to reduce corrosion resistance and increase film blistering over both wood and metal. Solubles are equally problematic in both naturally derived materials, precipitated products and post engineered materials. Common thixotropes such as the bentonite clays for example, may contain higher than desirable levels of chloride from surface treatment with quaternary ammonium salts. These may substantially reduce corrosion resistance when such materials are used to excess. Optimal chemical resistance is afforded by those extenders that are completely or substantially inert. These materials include silica (both micronized crystalline silicas and amorphous silicas) and barytes, which are only attacked under the most extreme conditions, at which attack on the polymer itself is likely. Silica is now being phased out by many manufacturers because of the dangers of free silica content. Low silica bearing feldspathic extenders such as nepheline syenite, which are almost as inert as silica itself, are taking up the slack in many applications where silica was once predominant. Like both barytes and silica, nepheline syenite is a cheap nodular pigment with an oil absorption that is in the same range as amorphous silica. Barytes is a small inert nodular pigment that packs well and gives excellent enamel holdout properties. Barytes is available in two forms, naturally ground barytes and the less common but whiter precipitated grade, which is usually finer and higher in oil absorption than the natural product. The softer precipitated grade known as blanc fix, disperses easily and is widely used in automobile surfaces
Extenders
and undercoats for gloss systems. Barytes is the heaviest extender with the lowest oil absorption characteristics. It is widely used in low VOC systems, but needs some additional support in order to control settling.
tant in the manufacture of paper. Here materials such as china clay and (since acidic paper making processes have given way to alkaline systems) calcium carbonate are employed. In the United States and Canada, the paper industry consumes more extender than any other industry. These extenders are used both as fillers in the actual manufacture of paper stock and for paper coatings. Extenders are used in the manufacture of paper to improve brilliance and opacity, and replace some of the more expensive fiber with minimal effect on quality. Paper coatings are subsequently applied to paper stock to enhance printability and appearance. A wide range of kaolin clays are employed; coating grades being brighter and finer than the filler grades used in paper manufacture. Both naturally ground limestone and precipitated carbonate are also now used in paint manufacture. As the particle size of the kaolin becomes smaller, binder demand increases and the differences between the gloss of the paper and the inks used become less apparent. As the particle size becomes finer, so the opacity of the coating also decreases. For a more complete treatise on the use of extenders in paper manufacture, see references 68.
Conclusion
The foregoing has provided a brief introduction to the use of extender pigments in a wide variety of different coatings. It is hoped that the above review will encourage additional research into the many applications to which these diverse materials may contribute.
For more information on extenders, Circle Number 87.
References
1 2
4 5
Payne, H.F. Organic Coatings Technology, Vol II, p.773-804, Wiley, NY. 1961. Nylen, P. and Sunderland, E. Modern Surface Coating, p. 461-473, Wiley, NY, 1965. Asbeck, W.K., and van Loo, M. Critical Pigment Volume Relationships, Industrial and Engineering Chemistry, July 1949, p.1470. Inoue, Y., Kogo Kagaku Zasshi, 46, (1943), 784. Hare, C.H. Mechanism of Corrosion Protection with Surface Treated Wollastonite Pigments, PCI, p 74, March 1998. Casey, J.P. Pulp and Paper, 3 Vol., 3rd Edition, Wiley Interscience, NY 1981. Hagemeyer, R.W. Use of Pigments in Paper, SME Preprint 85-49, AIME, Annual Meeting, New York, Feb. 1985. Paper Coating Pigments, Monograph #30, Technical Association of the Pulp and Paper Industry, Atlanta, 1966.